Satellites Spot Hidden Villages In Amazon 84
sciencehabit writes The Amazon is home to perhaps dozens of isolated tribes who make their living far off the grid from the wider society, growing crops and hunting and gathering in the forest. These reclusive peoples are threatened by drug running, illegal logging, and highway construction, even if they dwell in 'protected' reserves in Peru or Brazil; one group, apparently pushed out of its lands, made contact this summer. Now, researchers have a new way of examining their fate without disruptive and frightening flyovers by aircraft. Researchers use high-resolution WorldView or GeoEye satellite images to monitor demographic changes in isolated Amazon tribes. The scientists got location and population estimates for five isolated villages along the Brazil-Peru border from Brazilian government reports and other sources. Then they examined 50-centimeter resolution satellite images taken in 2006, 2012, and 2013 and could spot the peoples' horticultural fields and characteristic pattern of either longhouses or clusters of small houses; these villages could be clearly differentiated from the transient camps of illegal loggers or drug runners.
But (Score:5, Funny)
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How far off the grid do you have to go. (Score:2, Insightful)
If even these people can't have any privacy then we're all really screwed.
I hear it comes with a shiny gold ring (Score:5, Funny)
Re:How far off the grid do you have to go. (Score:4, Funny)
I would really like to live underground. That would solve so many problems. You would be immune to aerial surveillance, you would not have to worry about tornadoes or storms. The temperature is a constant. You can expand just by digging more rooms. It would be a lair. However it probably wouldn't get you laid.
Close, very close. Just replace the "expand just by digging more rooms" with "have food brought to you by your mom" and you got a perfect description of the stereotypical Slashdotter.
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I would really like to live underground. That would solve so many problems. You would be immune to aerial surveillance,
Make sure to cover up those air vents, infrared cameras could pick them up.
you would not have to worry about tornadoes or storms.
Except for the floods they bring.
The temperature is a constant. You can expand just by digging more rooms. It would be a lair. However it probably wouldn't get you laid.
Those particular tribes were found by the fields they cultivated.
We technically haven't found their homes yet.
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I would really like to live underground.... you would not have to worry about ... storms
Spoken like someone who has never had a basement in a flood-prone area.
Re:How far off the grid do you have to go. (Score:5, Interesting)
If even these people can't have any privacy then we're all really screwed.
The Sentinelese People [wikipedia.org] of the Andaman Islands have figured out how to keep their privacy: kill anyone who comes within the range of their arrows. Other, less belligerent, tribes in the Andaman Islands have made contact with outsiders, and suffered near extermination from introduced diseases. So the Sentinelese privacy policy seems to be working well for them.
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I wonder how much longer our Indians would have lasted if they just killed Columbus and his crew. If they never made it back to Spain it might have bought the indigenous people another 100 years.
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We clearly need to create a Drone Patrol to guard our privacy!
Re:Tomorrow's news (Score:5, Funny)
Re: Tomorrow's news (Score:1)
You missed Jehovah's Witness.
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Any others I've missed?
Yes - your Thorazine and Haldol
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Christians sending missionaries to these villages to show them the ways of Christ.
Actually, missionaries are highly unlikely to get a permit to enter regions of the Amazon populated by isolated tribes. They even used this to deny Daniel Everett the opportunity to return to study the Piraha language. (Everett originally visited the Piraha as a missionary, but was "converted" to atheism by his experiences there. His study of the language contradicted various mainstream theories of linguistics, and rather than saying "you're wrong, but feel free to look for evidence -- you won't find any,"
contact (Score:3)
one group, apparently pushed out of its lands, made contact this summer.
did they make FIRST CONTACT???
Re: contact (Score:1)
Made it out of their lands... with a warp engine of their own design.
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Consider this scenario:
An alien race exists, which travels the stars with some kind of FTL drive, knows the cure to all diseases, can provide food for anyone on demand, and give all people a comfortable life of happiness and leisure; without war or strife.
Then this alien race encounters human-kind for the first time.
Would you, as a human being, want them to:
A) Make contact and bring all their technological advancements to improve life for yourself, your children (if any), and all of humanity?
B) Keep away be
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For the average human, the correct answer would be:
C) Surrender so he can take their technology and declare himself emperor of humanity.
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If those aliens were host to multivarious viral and bacterial infections to which humanity would have no resistance, I'd prefer they stopped for a rest at a LaGrange point and communicated only by radio-waves.
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That calls for a re-hash of the Rumsfeldian quote about known unknowns and unknown known facts.
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I believe Rumsfeld focused on the known knowns, known unknowns and unknown unknows?
The unknown known was that he was bullshitting us. It's "the Emperor has no clothes" if you wish.
Perspective. (Score:3)
Re:Perspective. (Score:5, Funny)
Imagine how we would look to someone from 1914.
"You've had 100 years and still no flying cars? Lame."
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Re:Perspective. (Score:5, Interesting)
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Imagine how we must look from their perspective. Like gods peering down on them from the heavens with magical devices that grant us powers.
Erich von Däniken would be extremely happy to read your comments.
Perspective. (Score:2, Funny)
Then imagine their disappointment when they find out how we use this power. :P
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Imagine how we must look from their perspective. Like gods peering down on them from the heavens with magical devices that grant us powers. Can you imagine if we as a people encountered beings who were just as advanced from us as we are from those tribes. Hell even a mere 100 years of progress would seem miraculous to us to say nothing of eons. Imagine how we would look to someone from 1914.
There is a screenplay out there based roughly on this premise: https://www.scribd.com/doc/135... [scribd.com]
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*ahem* (Score:2)
Anybody using the satellite pix to catch and stop the loggers? Where's the infrared cams?
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leave them alone (Score:5, Insightful)
Chalk it up for +1 diversity, but for God's sake, don't try to visit them and sneeze in there general direction.
If they were unhappy, they would have walked in one direction long enough to "discover" others. Leave them be.
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But civilisation! They clearly need Iphones!
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how will they learn of conservation if they don't attend school we need to build highways to their sheltered world of jungle living. it's not like they're sustainable or anything like that, are they?
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If they were unhappy, they would have walked in one direction long enough to "discover" others. Leave them be.
if we were to find natives in the US...
Team Blue:
But are they paying "their" taxes? They were born within the geographic confines of a nation state, so they implicitly agreed to a the Social Contract.
Team Red:
Do they not benefit from the clean air and logging bans the government provides? Why should they not have to pay for those benefits? We can't have any free riders taking advantage of the sy
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Chalk it up for +1 diversity,
So we have an obligation to make sure they are not under represented in the tech industry.
If they were unhappy, they would have walked in one direction long enough to "discover" others. Leave them be.
Obviously they are simply to niave to realize how unhappy they truly are.
It is our duty to get them to American on an H1B ASAP. So they can sit in a cubicle in Silicon valley. Only then can they be truly happy.
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"If they were unhappy, they would have walked in one direction long enough to "discover" others. Leave them be."
Yes we need to protect them. It is our responsibility to keep them safe from the modern world. We all know that they just could not handle knowing about rest of the world, science, and technology. It is our responsibility to protect them like innocent children or some endangered wild animal.
Kipling would be proud of how take responsibility for your burden.
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Quick, let's steal their land and enslave them (Score:1)
After all, that's what happened to virtually everybody else on Earth.
Do you ever wonder why you have to work five days a week, until you're 67, and then you die within a few years of retirement?
Who claims to own all the land in your country? When somebody sells a piece of land, how did they claim to own it in the first place?
The people of the rainforest are being forced off their OWN land, where they have lived for tens of thousands of years, to be turned into wage slaves, working in factories. Wake up.
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"After all, that's what happened to virtually everybody else on Earth. Do you ever wonder why you have to work five days a week, until you're 67, and then you die within a few years of retirement? Who claims to own all the land in your country? When somebody sells a piece of land, how did they claim to own it in the first place? The people of the rainforest are being forced off their OWN land, where they have lived for tens of thousands of years, to be turned into wage slaves, working in factories. Wake up.